OHIO CHRISTIAN COLLEGE PROFESSOR WHO REJECTED TRANSGENDER STUDENT'S PRONOUNS CAN SUE UNIVERSITY, COURT RULES

A public university in Ohio will pay $400,000 in damages and attorney fees after punishing a professor for declining a male student's demand to be referred to as a female.

A public university in Ohio will pay $400,000 in damages and attorney fees after punishing a professor for declining a male student's demand to be referred to as a female. (Shawnee State University)

Shawnee State University would then place a written warning in Meriwether's personnel file, which stated that "further corrective actions" would be taken if a similar incident occurred.

The professor sued Shawnee State University, claiming that it violated his "right to free exercise of religion under the First Amendment."

In March 2021, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit ruled in favor of Meriwether, reversing a district court's prior dismissal of the lawsuit and allowing the professor to continue his lawsuit against the university.

A public university in Ohio will pay $400,000 in damages and attorney fees after punishing a professor for declining a male student's demand to be referred to as a female.

A public university in Ohio will pay $400,000 in damages and attorney fees after punishing a professor for declining a male student's demand to be referred to as a female. (Shawnee State University/Facebook)

Alliance Defending Freedom announced on Thursday that it reached a $400,000 settlement with Shawnee State University, which will cover damages and attorney fees.

Shawnee State University will also rescind the written warning to Meriwether in June 2018.

Tyson Langhofer, senior council for Alliance Defending Freedom, said that Meriwether "defended his freedom to speak."

"Dr. Meriwether rightly defended his freedom to speak and stay silent, and not conform to the university’s demand for uniformity of thought. We commend the university for ultimately agreeing to do the right thing, in keeping with its reason for existence as a marketplace of ideas," Langhofer said.